Months ago I ran into designer Susan Korn of beaded bag Susan Alexandra fame, on the street and she asked me if she could potentially cast my pug, Björk, in her upcoming fashion show she was still dreaming up with fellow designer Rachel Antonoff. It would be a dog show of sorts, she explained. As a longtime friend of mine, Korn always saw the It factor in Björk since she first met her as a pup in her Orchard street store nearly four years ago and so I told her when the time comes, her people could call Björk’s people (me).
As it turns out, Björk’s people was the very reason she was disqualified from participating in Susan Alexandra and Rachel Antonoff’s Best in Show runway, which took place off-calendar on the first day of New York Fashion Week. As Korn explained, “Well, she has a family!” and every dog who walked was a shelter dog in need of a home, provided by Animal Haven and Muddy Paws. When I explained this to Björk she reacted with the same detached nonchalance that gives her that untouchable supermodel quality, although she seemed pleased to still receive an invite to attend as a guest instead of as talent.
At the show, a cast of New York characters like Alison Roman and Tavi Gevinson, as well as actors and comedians like Chris Fleming and Sandra Bernhard, wore pieces like Rachel Antonoff’s coats covered in bow-tie pasta print while simultaneously cradling beaded Susan Alexandra bags and walking their pups with colorful beaded leashes from the pet collection. And yet the dogs, of course, put almost all of them to shame, while wearing small leopard print cowboy hats and shirts adorned with iconic New York food staples like the blue and white coffee cup and a pile of bagels. What is a New York character after all, without an iconic dog that looks like it has its own walk in closet?